Navigating indigenous resources that can be utilized in constructing a Karanga theology of health and well-being (Utano) :an exploration of health agency in contemporary Zimbabwe.

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Abstract

Health and well-being are the central concerns for most African people. If health and
well-being (utano) is the top priority for most Africans, the general and almost
complete breakdown of the Zimbabwean public health care system in the past decade
(2000-2010) has had far-reaching repercussions on the whole populace. Whereas
African theology and religious studies have expended considerable energy in
addressing the theme of health and well-being, there have been limited attempts at
developing indigenous theologies. This study plugs the gap in the available scholarly
literature by proposing a Karanga theology of health and well-being paying particular
attention to a specific community‘s responses to the health delivery systems in
Zimbabwe. Through an examination of indigenous responses to health and well-being
and critiquing the collapse of the health delivery systems in the period 2000-2010, the
study argues that understanding health agency in contemporary Zimbabwe enables
appreciating the centrality of utano (health and well-being). This study also seeks to
establish the agency of the community in responding to the national health care crisis,
focusing specially on the Karanga community in Murinye district. It explores the
Karanga healthworlds and documents the agency of the Karanga health-seekers and
health-care providers in responding to the health-care crisis. The major focus of the
study is to establish how the Karanga navigate the existing religious and medical
facilities (Modern scientific bio-medicine; Traditional healing and Faith-healing) in
their search for healing by conducting fieldwork research which entailed the use of
interviews and participant observation. The study was also influenced by oral theology
based on the community‘s underlying faith experiences. It also relied upon the life
history approach and narrative theology to establish trends and patterns in the Karanga
medical system. The study concludes by exploring some useful and life-giving
Karanga indigenous resources that can be utilized in constructing a Karanga theology
of health and well-being in contemporary Zimbabwe. A Karanga theology of utano
places emphasis on a liberative motif which is life-giving and life-enhancing. This
includes acknowledging the agency of health-seekers who are actively involved in
their own welfare. It argues that utano is achieved when, on the basis of indigenous
beliefs and Christian beliefs regarding health, individuals and families invest in
refusing to accept ill-health. Information drawn from study participants demonstrated
how they sought the opinions of traditional healers, prophet healers and modern health
practitioners whenever they felt that their condition was compromised. The study
foregrounds the fact that for the Karanga people, issues of health and well-being
cannot be separated from their religious perspectives. There are diverse religious
traditions among the Karanga people and these inform their understanding of utano.
As such, the three health delivery systems should not be viewed as competitors for
clients but more importantly, they should be viewed as complementing each other.

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